After the pin was out, the MGW barrel taker offer was attached and the barrel magically fell off.
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With the barrel off, the next step was to figure out what stainless barrel should be used. I can (and have) fit barrels to frames but it's sooooo much easier and faster to just walk over to the rack, grab a few barrels, and see which one fits. Yes, there's a comma in the price tag of a rack of barrels, but how much is your time worth?
My method of barrel matching starts with threading the original barrel on until it's hand snug and making a reference mark on the frame with a pencil.
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If the replacement barrel matches up with the mark it will clock properly with no fitting.
The first one did not, but was close.
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The second one was better but still not quite there.
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The third one wasn't even close.
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Number 4 matched up perfectly.
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That 4th one was a snubby barrel and I still had some 4" barrels to try. #5 matched up as well…
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So now I had a choice between a 4" and a 2 3/4" barrel. I knew I had the correct length ejector rod available…the deciding factor was going to be the rear sight. Snubby model 19's and 66's use a longer rear sight that bridges
dat gap between the frame and the sight base on the snubby barrel. Did I have the right rear sight to do this properly?
I've shared the incantations I use to summon stock sets out of the pile, but I'm afraid that the rare rear sight ritual phrases are only available to members of the HomeSmith Inner Circle. All I'm allowed to share publicly is that it involves cutting one leg off of the horse on the top of a bottle of Blantons while wearing a paper hat made from the pages of the 1986 Kansas City phone book.
The Gods of the Copybook Headings smiled upon me and the pile belched forth not one but several of the appropriate rear sights. I set the best one aside for another project that I have coming up and picked one that just needed a good cleaning for the faux pinto.
We were in business….a snubby it shall be.
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